Vol. 24 Issue 1 Reviews
Gerard Pape: Electroacoustic Chamber Works
Compact disc, 1998, mode 67;
available from Mode Records
P.O. Box 1026
New York, New York 10116, USA
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Reviewed by Ross Feller (Fargo, North Dakota, USA)

Gerard Pape (current director of Les Ateliers UPIC in Paris) is a composer who writes on the cusp between the familiar and the new. In the liner notes, Mr. Pape writes about the new compositional departures which led to the works on this compact disc. His attempt to create the "richest and liveliest compositions" is, for the most part, successful. Taking his cue from the composer Julio Estrada, who he met in 1991, he set out to independently control various micro-parameters of sound by constructing trajectory paths for each. All the works on this disc involve live performers with tape and/or sound projection. Thus, the composer further extends his control over the finished product through his work in the studio. Besides Mr. Estrada, Iannis Xenakis and Giacinto Scelsi are also cited as influences on Mr. Pape's work.

The five compositions on this recording were written between 1993 and 1997. Two Electro-Acoustic Songs, the earliest, is scored for voice, flute, tape, and sound projection. It combines flute attacks with vocal sustains, and vice-versa, resulting in an elaborate "timbral monophony." Though it is perhaps the most conventional sounding work of the five, the sheer display of timbral/harmonic combinations is more than enough to sustain interest. The texts for the songs comes from two poems by the Israeli poetess, Dahlia Ravikovitch, and are set in the original Hebrew. In the second song "On the Road at Night," the UPIC is used to both clarify and cloud the harmonic content of the voice and flute parts.

La Fleuve du Désir (River of Desire), for string quartet and tape, was inspired by the composer's contemplation of fluid flow, both real and imaginary. He uses eight trajectory rates to control changes of pitch, vibrato, amplitude, and bow accentuation, position, color, speed, and pressure. Texturally the piece moves between harmonic series, clusters, and noise. The effect is remarkable, and includes human-like sounds such as crying, soft wailing, and speech, all performed by the strings. At times, the eight trajectories contribute to an exaggerated, artificial sounding texture which threatens to erupt into total chaos. The members of the Arditti String Quartet heard on this recording live up to their customary excellence. One gets the impression that the title refers not to an amorous desire, but instead to a desire which seeks to extract itself from a larger, turbulent context which has imprisoned it.

The longest piece in this collection is Monologue, for bass voice, tape, and sound projection. Although over 32 minutes in duration, this work never seems to lose focus. Firstly, there is a vast display of vocal techniques, from the most nasal to the most full-throated. Virtuoso bass Nicholas Isherwood manages to comfortably vary the pitch, intensity, and timbre of his voice, at times producing deep, Tibetan-like growling in rapid succession with very high-pitched nasal whining. Mr. Pape describes this piece as a chamber opera for bass voice and eight-channel tape. The tape part was composed on the UPIC system. The "libretto" is Samuel Beckett's play entitled, A Piece of Monologue.

Battle, written a year after Monologue, expands upon the vocal exploration of the earlier piece. Battle is scored for four solo voices, two mixed choirs, and tape, and was written for Nicholas Isherwood and his excellent ensemble, Vox Nova. The choirs were pre-recorded and spatially mixed onto tape. This piece was inspired by Clive Barker's novel Weaveworld as well as the idea that discontinuity and continuity might coexist in chaotic structure. The form of Battle is both antiphonal and episodic. The sections are short and oscillate between antithetical materials, until they eventually merge in an uneasy coexistence. Unfortunately the arbitrary and unclear ending weakens the effect of this otherwise fascinating work.

The last piece, entitled Makbénach, is for saxophone, instrumental ensemble, tape, and sound projection. The work was written for, and admirably performed by, saxophonist Daniel Kientzy and the Ensemble 2e2m under the direction of Paul Mefano. The saxophone part often utilizes wide and erratic vibrato sounding at times like Greek or Balkan music, and at other times like Albert Ayler. Like the other works, this one was composed according to the principles of multiparametric polyphony. The tape part consists of instrumental and synthetic sounds convolved and mixed with a voice. Makbénach is a suitable ending for a highly idiosyncratic set of compositions.